Föhrenbergkreis Finanzwirtschaft

Unkonventionelle Lösungen für eine zukunftsfähige Gesellschaft

Roubini : This ‚time bomb‘ will trigger next Financial Collapse

Posted by hkarner - 6. Juli 2015

Saturday, July 4, 2015


The man who called the 2008 financial crisis is sounding the alarm about what may cause the next one.
Nouriel Roubini, who has been dubbed „Dr. Doom“ for his dark predictions, warned in an Op-Ed in The Guardian on Monday about the existence of a „liquidity time bomb“ that he fears will eventually „trigger a bust and a collapse.“

The New York University economist joins a growing number of observers who are worried about the issue. Liquidity is the lifeblood of financial markets. It measures how easy it is for investors to quickly sell stocks and bonds. When investors get fearful but can’t sell their stocks, it causes even more panic.

Are more flash crashes coming? Roubini pointed to several scary episodes to back up his case that investors should be worried about „severe market illiquidity.“
Investors around the world were spooked by the May 2010 flash crash, which sent the Dow Industrials plummeting nearly 1,000 points in about half an hour before recovering.
And then there was the „taper tantrum“ in the spring of 2013 when bond yields skyrocketed for a few days after ex-Fed chief Ben Bernanke suggested ending quantitative easing.
Just last fall, bonds had a „flash crash“ of their own, mysteriously plummeting in dramatic fashion on one day before rebounding. One New York Fed official even said reduced liquidity may have played a role in the incident.

So what’s causing these liquidity troubles? Roubini pointed to three major factors:
1) Herding behavior: Lightning fast trading makes up an increasingly large amount of activity in the stock market. This has led to „herding behavior“ and crowded trades (think: bullish on the U.S. dollar) that can create chaos when surprises occur and everyone heads for the exits at the same time.
2) Bonds are not stocks: It’s important to remember that fixed-income assets don’t trade in super liquid stock markets. They mostly change hands in illiquid, over-the-counter markets. Despite that, as Roubini points out, investors can cash out overnight. That creates the potential for fire sales like those that hit the mortgage bond market in 2007 and 2008.

Nouriel Roubini is an American professor of Economics at New York University`s Stern School of Business and chairman of RGE Roubini Global Economics

 

Hinterlasse einen Kommentar

Diese Seite verwendet Akismet, um Spam zu reduzieren. Erfahre, wie deine Kommentardaten verarbeitet werden..